Glamour and speed are in prospect at the rugged new Riverside, Calif. road course on the fringe of the Mohave Desert, where the last national Sports Car Club of America race meeting of the season will be held this weekend

Whether you already average 200, would like to, or simply seek fun and companionship on the lanes, here is a revolutionary guide for you—16 illustrated pages in which Bowling Editor Victor Kalman presents in detail, for the first time, the scientific style of the sport's greatest figure. Your game is bound to improve after you learn the 10 SECRETS OF BOWLING

UPPER ECHELON

High in the sky on their do-it-yourself grandstand sit Edward C. Roth (left) perpetrator of this contraption, and Jack Brossart. Roth's ingenious invention enables the pair to have an uncluttered view of sports car races, of which both are aficionados, and the entire device can be knocked down into a small bundle that tucks into the back of the car. Contrived of steel rods tailored to measure, the rig supports two porch chairs at an altitude of nine feet with a revolving swing of 120°—a range that is also a boon to Roth's hobby of movie-making. Roth spent all of 10 hours and $30 devising his "skyview chair," and he plans to market it, in such spare time as he can manage from his duties in the Buffalo offices of Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner and Beane. A sometime entrant in drag races, Roth drives the Alfa Romeo Giulietta Spyder that serves as grandstand foundation here.

Before he became the premier postseason performer of his generation, the Patriots icon was a middling college quarterback who invited skepticism, even scorn, from fans and his coaches. That was all—and that was everything